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Chapter 10 Parties, Party Systems and Interest Groups
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This Week… Political Parties Interest Groups Party Systems The impact of party systems on political parties
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Single Party Systems, Multiparty Systems and Interest Groups Differences in understanding of legitimacy ▫Multiparty systems in Europe ▫Two Party system in the USA ▫Single Party system in the USSR or China Interest groups in the decision making processes
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What are Political Parties Political organizations ▫Seek to affect/influence policy ▫Primarily seek election or appointment to public office ▫Responsive to what the electorate wants ▫Broad set of principles ▫Provide platforms designed to appeal to broad collection of society ▫“articulate and aggregate ideas”
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Interest Groups An organization that seeks to change the political system, policies or behaviours to fit own view ▫May endorse politicians ▫May advocate against politicians (or seek to influence them) CTF, NRA, AAA Civil society ▫A broader set of interests across society, not always political, but usually seeking to improve the community Articulation and aggregation of ideas
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Party Types Many kinds of parties – 3 we will note here Elite parties ▫Small number of political elite dominate Mass Parties ▫Large memberships, seek to engage the population in a massive movement to change the status quo (associated with extreme left and right) Catch all parties ▫Limited ideology, want broad based support ▫Generally reflects the will of voters
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What are Party Systems Defined by patterns of party politics in a state Generally associated with the number of parties involved in the political system ▫Electable parties more important than unelectable ones
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Kinds of Party Systems Single party dominant systems ▫Often associated with authoritarian regime ▫Viewed positively as a system in states with focus on community, rather than individual rights ▫More effective economic policies ▫Multiple parties divisive? ▫Some democratic states have strong single parties Japan, South Africa, Mexico (from the 1930s-2000) Canada in the 20 th C? Africa and independence
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Two Party Systems Surprisingly, two major parties ▫Two parties dominate over numerous elections ▫Noticeably different platforms Right vs Left ▫Tend to emerge in single-member district systems ▫Larger parties tend to dominate in SMDs, so fewer parties survive
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Multiparty Systems More than two competitive parties ▫Larger parties with more broad appeal ▫Smaller, sometimes, single issue parties are competitive ▫Usually associated with PR ▫Some advocates would argue that this better reflects voter preferences
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Party Systems and Political Outcomes Two party systems collapse to the middle ▫Median voters ▫The swing vote ▫Playing to the base What happens if the distribution of preferences isn’t regular, but bi-modal? ▫Multiparty system will emerge What happens if people aren’t universally left or right, but concerned in different ways about different issues?
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Interest Groups and Representation Pluralism: ▫How should government work? ▫Many voices of different groups, when they disagree it is up to the politicians to determine the wider public’s preference ▫What about special interests (too many voices?) Inefficiency ▫The collective action and free riders in interest groups ▫Variety of voices may drown out the most important
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Interest Groups and Representation 2 Corporatism: ▫Most important voices are government, business and labour Empirical evidence in growth of Japan and South Korea ▫Consensus based decisions Less disagreement and tensions in society Harmony in relationships between business and labour
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But… Corporatism isn’t inherently positive: ▫Who gets to participate in this arrangements (how are they chosen and held accountable) ▫Crony capitalism? ▫“Calcifying” relationships (which industry is THE industry that should have a say?) ▫Elite dominant ▫More groups ensure that the largest groups can never get too powerful.
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